High precision proton angular distribution measurements of $^{12}$C(p,p') for determination of the $E0$ decay branching ratio of the Hoyle state
K.J. Cook, A. Chevis, T.K. Eriksen, E.C. Simpson, T. Kibedi, L.T., Bezzina, A.C. Berriman, J. Buete, I.P. Carter, M. Dasgupta, D.J. Hinde, D.Y., Jeung, P. McGlynn, S. Parker-Steele, B.M.A. Swinton-Bland, T. Tanaka, W., Wojtaczka

TL;DR
This study provides high-precision measurements of proton angular distributions in $^{12}$C$(p,p')$ reactions to accurately determine the $E0$ decay branching ratio of the Hoyle state, crucial for understanding stellar carbon production.
Contribution
The paper introduces a comprehensive dataset of proton inelastic scattering cross-sections for $^{12}$C, reducing uncertainties in the $E0$ branching ratio measurement of the Hoyle state.
Findings
Determined population ratios of $2^+_1$ and Hoyle states at various energies.
Provided a method to apply these ratios to thick target measurements.
Reduced uncertainties in the $E0$ decay branching ratio for astrophysical models.
Abstract
Background: In stars, carbon is produced exclusively via the process, where three particles fuse to form C in the excited Hoyle state, which can then decay to the ground state. The rate of carbon production in stars depends on the radiative width of the Hoyle state. The radiative width can be deduced by combining three separately measured quantities, one of which is the decay branching ratio. The branching ratio can be measured by exciting the Hoyle state in the C reaction and measuring the pair decay of its Hoyle state and first state. Purpose: To reduce the uncertainties in the carbon production rate in the universe by measuring a set of proton angular distributions for the population of the Hoyle state () and state in C in C reactions between 10.20 and 10.70 MeV, used in the determination…
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